Automotive Electrical Power Distribution System GalinaDesigner21 × Galina Member for 11 years 104 designs 3 groups Member of the PartQuest Explore team. https://explore.partquest.com/node/1001 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/1001"></iframe> Title Description <p>This automotive electrical power distribution system example includes multiple vehicle sub-systems and components. It supports sizing analysis for wires and fuses, under both static and transient loading conditions. This includes multi-discipline (i.e. electro-thermal-mechanical) dynamic operations such as incandescent lamp in-rush current and motor start-up conditions. The example also demonstrates the special characteristics and design considerations needed for constant power loads, such as switching converters used in LED Driver circuits.</p><p>This system also uses a special “direction sensitive” current monitor model that can help identify sneak circuits (i.e. unintended current paths), such as the one found in the “door-ajar”, ignition switch, chime and dome lamp interconnect circuit. Challenge: See if you can find it before running the simulation!</p> About text formats Tags Fuse Sizingwire sizinglamp in-rush currentsneak circuitMotor Start-upLED LightingConstant Power Loads Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
Automotive Electrical Power Distribution System Adam CablerDesigner30 × Adam Cabler Member for 10 years 10 months 188 designs 1 groups Add a bio to your profile to share information about yourself with other SystemVision users. https://explore.partquest.com/node/718 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/718"></iframe> Title Description <p>This automotive electrical power distribution system example includes multiple vehicle sub-systems and components. It supports sizing analysis for wires and fuses, under both static and transient loading conditions. This includes multi-discipline (i.e. electro-thermal-mechanical) dynamic operations such as incandescent lamp in-rush current and motor start-up conditions. The example also demonstrates the special characteristics and design considerations needed for constant power loads, such as switching converters used in LED Driver circuits.</p><p>This system also uses a special “direction sensitive” current monitor model that can help identify sneak circuits (i.e. unintended current paths), such as the one found in the “door-ajar”, ignition switch, chime and dome lamp interconnect circuit. Challenge: See if you can find it before running the simulation!</p> About text formats Tags Fuse Sizingwire sizinglamp in-rush currentsneak circuitMotor Start-upLED LightingConstant Power Loads Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -
Automotive Electrical Power Distribution System DarrellDesigner10 × Darrell Member for 11 years 624 designs 10 groups Big fan of VHDL-AMS https://explore.partquest.com/node/503 <iframe allowfullscreen="true" referrerpolicy="origin-when-cross-origin" frameborder="0" width="100%" height="720" scrolling="no" src="https://explore.partquest.com/node/503"></iframe> Title Description <p>This automotive electrical power distribution system example includes multiple vehicle sub-systems and components. It supports sizing analysis for wires and fuses, under both static and transient loading conditions. This includes multi-discipline (i.e. electro-thermal-mechanical) dynamic operations such as incandescent lamp in-rush current and motor start-up conditions. The example also demonstrates the special characteristics and design considerations needed for constant power loads, such as switching converters used in LED Driver circuits.</p><p>This system also uses a special “direction sensitive” current monitor model that can help identify sneak circuits (i.e. unintended current paths), such as the one found in the “door-ajar”, ignition switch, chime and dome lamp interconnect circuit. Challenge: See if you can find it before running the simulation!</p> About text formats Tags Fuse Sizinglamp in-rush currentsneak circuitMotor Start-upLED LightingConstant Power Loads Select a tag from the list or create your own.Drag to re-order taxonomy terms. License - None -